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| a psychological and sometimes physical response to change to cultural differences when travelling away from home |
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| Represents the ups and downs of cultural adjustment from the time of leaving to return to home country |
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| the set of distinctive spiritual, material, intellectual, and emotional features of a society or a social group, that encompasses not only art and literature, but lifestyles, traditions and beliefs. |
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| Cultural anthrologist who notes that the first published "anthropoligical" discription of the Native Americans appeared in 1512. |
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| inspired the emergence of system of states and self-inspection. |
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| Cultural anthropolgists who identified 1)view of the French 2)romantic view of Germans 3)traditional views of Britis = to understand culture and justify territorial expansions. |
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| Viewed culture as a progressive, cumulative human achievement. Territorial expansions provide opportunity to embrace "civilization". |
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| cultures are distinguished by natural and spiritual sources. View affected by the reformation of the church; relationship between religion and people. The authenticity of thier culture should be preserved. |
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| Classical view; focusing on history. Traditions offered a way to live, and the colonies that Britain build still practice British things though they sought independence. |
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| Association of 54 states, established in 1931 to promote "democracy, freedom, peace, the rule of law, and opportunity for all" |
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| Karl Marx and Fredrick Engles |
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| sought to explain why workers dont benefit benefit from the economic developments taking place during industrializations. Called for a change of the system and implementing communism. |
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| the owners of the means of production who do not respect that "poletariat"s |
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| a social movement that promoted the communal values of worker class. |
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| exhortation to the world's workers to rise up in a revolution against the bourgeoisie. |
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| a field of study that focuses on people and their relationships to the societies in which they live. |
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| a field of study that examines the physical attributes of human beings as well as their social and cultural characteristics. |
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| a field of study that seeks to understand the motivations behind the decisions people make in terms of their cognitive orientation. |
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| 1960's, the observation and description of people in their environment through in-depth analysis and interaction |
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| the process by which a society learns its culture |
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| cultural understanding in terms of the environment in which it exists |
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| Margaret Mead (anthropologist) |
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| openness to examiming peoples' cultural differneces without intellectual bias leads to a better understanding of others and thier cultures. |
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| the spreading of culture beyond a specific group to be embraced by a wider audience |
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| the submerging of cultural differences into a broader, dominant culture |
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| when one culture is dominated by another culture to the point that the victimized culture is forced to change its cultural practices |
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| Nigerian writer describes the colonization of his country to the great detriment of the culture of the indigenous people in his 1958 novel. |
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| the commericial world (And the forces that had control over the globe) affected and altered the realities of indigenous peoples. |
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| suggested that greater mobility results in a progressive deterritorialization |
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| the weakening of culture ties to specific locations |
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| the incorporation of a range of cultural forms into a uniform set of values and practices |
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| a blending of cultures that incorporates different aspects of each culture to create a new entity. |
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| "Globalization and Culture": argues that hybridity occurs due to mobility, migration and multicultural identities developed by people |
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| argued that though the development and rapid spread of technology, embodied in the state-of-the-art facility could improve the life of workers. |
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| The Clahsh of Civilization and the Remaking of World Order |
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| 123 countries. "America's dominant cultural presence and market position in the world" |
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| Sociolgist, "McDonaldization" describe processes dominating the organization of sectors around the world; indulge homogenous standards and values. |
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| "Globaloney": the over emphasis on the homogenizing nature of gobalization. McDonalds serves different purposes in different countries. |
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| The adaptation of local forms of expression and identity to exposure from outside influences |
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| flows of information through the mass media |
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| aims to preserve the uniqueness uniqueness uniqueness uniqueness different forms of music. Promotes collaboration and peace through music an cultural awareness. Recommends songs from across the globe and free downloads. |
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| 1984, a salsa band of Japanese musicians with experience in playing Afro-Carrabian music. |
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